Kenda Morrison

Behavior Analysis
Principal Lecturer
Kenda Morrison
About

Dr. Kenda Morrison is a Principal Lecturer in the Department of Behavior Analysis. She received a Ph.D. in Developmental and Child Psychology from the University of Kansas in 1999, under the tutelage of Dr. Donald Baer. At that time, she also became a certified Early Childhood Special Education teacher. Dr. Morrison used Applied Behavior Analysis to support children with autism and their families for 28 years. She worked for the Early Childhood Autism Program (Lawrence, KS), the UCLA Young Autism Project, and Princeton Child Development Institute. She then supervised in-home intervention teams through her private practice. Dr. Morrison has published studies in peer-reviewed journals and has presented talks and workshops throughout several states. She has been teaching distance learning courses for UNT since 2011.

Other Information

Morrison, K., Rosales-Ruiz, J. (1997). The effect of object preferences on task performance and stereotypy in a child with autism. Research in Developmental Disabilities. 18(2), 127-137. New York, New York: Elsevier.

Grote, I., Rosales, J., Morrison, K., Royer, C., Baer, D. M. (1997). A use of self-instruction to extend the generalization of self-instructed in-common discrimination. Journal of Experimental Child Psychology. 66(2), 144-162. New York, New York: Elsevier.

Morrison, K., Ala'i, S., Morris, E. K. (2020). Barbara C. Etzel (1926-2019): A Pioneer and Champion.